Southern high latitude climate variability in the Late Cretaceous greenhouse world |
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Authors: | Stephen J. Gallagher Barbara E. Wagstaff Jennifer G. Baird Malcolm W. Wallace Chung Leong Li |
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Affiliation: | aSchool of Earth Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia |
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Abstract: | A palynological study of oil exploration wells in the Gippsland Basin southeastern Australia has provided a record of southern high latitude climate variability for the last 12 million years of the Cretaceous greenhouse world. During this time, the vegetation was dominated by a cool to temperate flora of Podocarpaceae, Proteaceae and Nothofagidites spp. at a latitude of 60°S. Milankovitch forced cyclic alternations from drier to wetter climatic periods caused vegetation variability from 72 to 77 Ma. This climate change was probably related to the waxing and waning of ephemeral (100 ky) small ice sheets in Antarctica during times of insolation minima and maxima. Drying and cooling after 72 Ma culminated from 68 to 66 Ma, mirroring trends in global δ18O data. Quantitative palynofloral analyses have the potential to provide realistic proxies for small-scale climate variability in the predominantly ice-free Late Cretaceous. |
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Keywords: | Campanian Maastrichtian Palynoflora Climate Greenhouse |
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